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Whether offering an affordable space to work, an area for collaboration or seminars for small businesses, there are more options available to Central Massachusetts startups and entrepreneurs to get their ventures out of the gate.
Jeff Schiebe follows up on a previous WBJ print edition column in which he addressed three ways to help entrepreneurs in Worcester. Here, he talks about a fourth key ingredient: entrepreneurial spirit.
For centuries, entrepreneurs in the United States relied on a unique patenting system that granted protection to ideas and inventions from the moment of creation.
Patients, doctors, substance abuse counselors, politicians, lawyers, veterans and entrepreneurs hoping to cash in on the legalization of medical marijuana weighed in on potential regulations Wednesday afternoon in Worcester.
Worcester Polytechnic Institute's WPI Venture Forum has shortened its name to The Venture Forum to reflect what it hopes will be an expanded geographic reach.
How can we keep entrepreneurs and young start-ups in Worcester and MetroWest?
Anton Nel, the man who wants to turn Westborough State Hospital into a film studio and mixed-use development, is a unique sort of developer for Central Massachusetts.
The TD Bank data breach that came to light this week could cost the bank millions in lost business. Bob Siegel, founder of a local privacy protection startup, is trying to help clients avoid the same fate.
The video game industry in Massachusetts is reaching new levels of growth, with no signs of stopping.
SMALL BUSINESS PRAISE
Barbara Finer, owner of QuiVivity Marketing Partners in Marlborough, is courting town officials in a handful of MetroWest towns to realize her vision of a technology incubator west of Route 128.
There are a lot of barriers to finding occupants for historic, single-family homes, according to Natick developer and architect John "Gerry" Horne.
When Gov. Deval Patrick traveled to Israel last year on a highly publicized trade mission, he was looking to find life sciences entrepreneurs like Tuvia Sofinzon.
There are people whose dream is to work from home. Then there are others who do so and just want to get out of their sweats and interact with colleagues.
Say you're a researcher on the trail of something right out of science fiction — a tiny device made entirely out of biological materials that can repair diseased heart tissue, or take the place of a pacemaker without the risk of infection or immun
The efforts to turn Central Massachusetts into a life sciences epicenter to rival — or depending who you talk to, complement — Cambridge and Boston have been well underway for decades.